The Good Neighbor. Sharon Mignerey
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“That boy.” Helen shook her head as though he really was a boy instead of a grown man in his midthirties.
“His car is still here,” Megan added, “so he’s probably still around somewhere.”
Personally, she hoped he’d find someplace else to stay soon, since she was nearly positive he had been stealing from Helen. She had vast collections that included expensive jewelry, Italian ceramic figurines, hundreds of colorful, hand-painted pitchers from all over the world and a plastic washtub filled with old coins, some predating the Civil War. Every time she had been in Helen’s house since Robby’s arrival, he was asking his grandmother about her things and how much they were worth. Megan suspected his interest wasn’t just a simple matter of curiosity.
“He came through the kitchen like a whirlwind about a half hour ago,” Helen said. “He told me he had errands to run and that he’d be gone all day because he was checking out some prospects.” She shook her head, her short, white curls bouncing a little. “I wish I understood what that meant. If he was applying for a job somewhere, why couldn’t he say so?”
Helen had talked about that, too—Robby’s job hunting or lack of it—every day.
Megan wished she knew how to tell her neighbor that Robby was stealing from her. Not an easy thing to do, since she couldn’t prove it. Besides that, Helen saw him as needing sympathy because of his recent bad luck after losing his job in Denver.
“Is there anything you need today?” Megan asked. “I’ve got to stop at the grocery store on the way home.”
“You’re such a dear to ask, but no.” Smiling, Helen gave a little wave, scooped up her cat and went back inside.
Megan headed for Helen’s trash cans, her thoughts on her busy day as she pulled open the gate.
And there was Robby, sprawled on the ground next to an overturned trash barrel, a bloody gash at his temple, his sightless eyes fixed on the brilliant autumn sky.
His old stomach ulcer burning, Detective Wade Prescott arrived a half hour later at the address on Red Robin Lane in response to a personal call from the chief. Natchez, Colorado, had its first murder in more than thirty years.
Wade had moved here from Chicago six months ago to be closer to the vast expanse of wide-open spaces that had captured his imagination when he’d come to the area on vacation last year. He also wanted to live in a community where the crime rate was so low that he was the only detective in the county. The position had been described to him as more of a community outreach than an investigative job, and that had sounded perfect for a burned-out cop who had prayed to never investigate another murder. The one that haunted him daily had occurred twenty-two months ago, and involved two little girls who had been executed by their father and whose mother was now serving a life sentence for taking his life. The case had shaken Wade to the core, making him question whether he was fit to be a cop. Worse, he wanted to rage at God for the injustice of it all.
The houses in this older neighborhood were modest, with neat yards and big shade trees. The place was the quintessential small town. When he’d first moved here, he kept expecting to see Andy and Opie emerge from one of Natchez’s tidy houses with their fishing poles over their shoulders.
He knew he was at the right place because of the people standing in clusters on the neighboring lawns. A police cruiser, a fire truck and an ambulance were parked in the middle of the street, effectively blocking traffic and adding to the chaos.
The first thing he noticed was a body bag and an old woman who couldn’t take her eyes away from it.
A body bag. Surely some fool hadn’t moved the body.
His gaze went back to the old woman who was being comforted by a much younger woman whose shirt and slacks were stained with blood. Both looked familiar to him, something that still surprised him even after six months. Natchez was a community of three thousand in such a remote part of the state the nearest city of any size was a three-hour drive away. That was undoubtedly why everyone had begun to look familiar—because he was seeing them all the time at places like the grocery store, the local diner and the Independence Day picnic. Firemen from the volunteer station were standing around, and the officer talking to them was Aaron Moran, a rookie who had been on the squad a whole four weeks.
Moran came toward Wade as he got out of the car.
“I’m sure glad to see you,” he said as another police cruiser drove up and a hearse from the funeral home parked behind Wade’s vehicle.
“Where was the body found?” Wade asked.
“Over there by the trash cans,” Moran answered, waving in the direction of a partially open gate with a rose-covered arbor. “The neighbor found the body when she went to take out Mrs. Russell’s trash.”
“Take Mrs. Russell inside,” he told Moran, saving the talk about securing the crime scene and getting witness statements for a moment when he wasn’t irritated. “Get her statement, and stay with her until I come get you.”
He called to Officer Jim Udell, who was getting out of his cruiser. “Cordon off the crime scene,” Wade told him, “starting there.” He pointed to the curb about sixty feet in front of the gate. Then he headed down the driveway toward the young woman who was following Moran and Mrs. Russell into the house.
“Miss,” Wade called to her.
She stopped, her vivid blue eyes filled with the dazed expression of someone unexpectedly exposed to violence. He felt an unexpected tug of sympathy for her. “You’re the one who called this in?” he asked.
“Yes.” Her gaze left his and drifted to the body bag.
“I need to talk to you.” Noticing a picnic table under an umbrella in the backyard, he waved toward it. “Do you mind waiting for me over there? I shouldn’t be more than five minutes.”
He’d had years of experience securing people’s cooperation—just the right amount of authority in his voice without making people afraid. Yet, she reacted to him as though he had shouted at her. She was pretty, something he noticed as a man more than as a cop, a notion that didn’t please him a bit, as he studied her face. There was a time and a place, and this was neither.
Her shocky expression faded a bit. With a nod, she walked away from him, leaving him with the feeling there was more to her than a neighbor simply finding a body. Tucking away that thought to reexamine later, he turned back toward the chaos, determined to get control of the crime scene.
Firemen, EMTs, a couple of guys from the funeral home, and the county coroner were the only other people left inside the perimeter that Officer Udell had blocked off with crime-scene tape. “Talk to the folks standing around,” Wade told him, “and see what they saw or heard. Find out who belongs on this street and who doesn’t.”
“I’m on it,” Udell said.
Doc Wagner, a family practitioner who had first been elected as the county coroner close to forty years ago, came toward him. Since there wasn’t much crime in Natchez, there was no medical examiner to help investigate and make sure evidence was preserved—just this family doctor who was a fixture in the community.
“Just